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Acetyl-CoA Derived from Hepatic Peroxisomal β-Oxidation Inhibits Autophagy and Promotes Steatosis via mTORC1 Activation.

Citation
He, A., et al. “Acetyl-Coa Derived From Hepatic Peroxisomal Β-Oxidation Inhibits Autophagy And Promotes Steatosis Via Mtorc1 Activation.”. Molecular Cell, pp. 30-42.e4.
Center Washington University in St Louis
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Author Anyuan He, Xiaowen Chen, Min Tan, Yali Chen, Dongliang Lu, Xiangyu Zhang, John M Dean, Babak Razani, Irfan J Lodhi
Keywords Acox1, Autophagy, lipid metabolism, NAFLD, Raptor, fatty acid oxidation, Lipophagy, mTOR, peroxisomes
Abstract

Autophagy is activated by prolonged fasting but cannot overcome the ensuing hepatic lipid overload, resulting in fatty liver. Here, we describe a peroxisome-lysosome metabolic link that restricts autophagic degradation of lipids. Acyl-CoA oxidase 1 (Acox1), the enzyme that catalyzes the first step in peroxisomal β-oxidation, is enriched in liver and further increases with fasting or high-fat diet (HFD). Liver-specific Acox1 knockout (Acox1-LKO) protected mice against hepatic steatosis caused by starvation or HFD due to induction of autophagic degradation of lipid droplets. Hepatic Acox1 deficiency markedly lowered total cytosolic acetyl-CoA levels, which led to decreased Raptor acetylation and reduced lysosomal localization of mTOR, resulting in impaired activation of mTORC1, a central regulator of autophagy. Dichloroacetic acid treatment elevated acetyl-CoA levels, restored mTORC1 activation, inhibited autophagy, and increased hepatic triglycerides in Acox1-LKO mice. These results identify peroxisome-derived acetyl-CoA as a key metabolic regulator of autophagy that controls hepatic lipid homeostasis.

Year of Publication
2020
Journal
Molecular cell
Volume
79
Issue
1
Number of Pages
30-42.e4
Date Published
07/2020
ISSN Number
1097-4164
DOI
10.1016/j.molcel.2020.05.007
Alternate Journal
Mol. Cell
PMID
32473093
PMCID
PMC7335356
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